Threatening letter from a “Molly Maguire” to the editor of the Shenandoah Herald | 1875

Molly Maguires meeting in Schuylkill County, PA in 1870s

An anonymous 'Molly Maguire' boldly warned Shenandoah newspaper editor Tom Foster in 1875: with the union broken, robbed by the companies, "we intend it to cost them..." With "nothing to defind ourselves with But our Revolvers" they demanded "a fare Days wages for a fare Days work." Read the full story.

“A lonely job” – A photograph of a child mineworker at work in Pittston, Pennsylvania | 1911

In 1911, activist Lewis Hine found 13-year-old Willie Brieden working as a nipper 500 feet underground in Pittston, PA - alone in the dark, opening heavy doors as gas hissed nearby. Days later, Willie was home sick, coughing from endless hours in the damp mine. A childhood bent to anthracite's demands, captured in one image. Read the full story.

Podcast | The 1880s battle over Gettysburg’s first Confederate monument with Codie Eash

What feels like a modern fight over Confederate monuments began at Gettysburg in the 1880s. In this episode of the Public History Podcast, Codie Eash shows how veterans battled over memory, treason, and power - and how the Lost Cause was challenged by US veterans from the start on America’s most famous battlefield. Read the full story.

Pottsville’s oldest surviving railroad station

Pottsville depot

On a recent drive through Pottsville, I pulled off the road for a quick photo—and ended up staring at one of the city’s oldest surviving witnesses to history. It’s the last remnant of the Philadelphia & Reading Railroad’s original passenger depot: a brick head house built in 1851. One important moment in American history still hangs over the place. Read the full story.

Article highlights history of my hometown on eve of its 200th anniversary | Williamstown, PA

Williamstown Pennsylvania around 1900

As my hometown of Williamstown, Pennsylvania nears its 200th anniversary in 2026, a new article at PennLive looks at how coal built the town, shaped generations of workers, and left a lasting mark on the landscape. Read the full story.

2025 Year in Review | Jake Wynn – Public Historian

Jake Wynn - Public Historian at Eckley Miners' Village in Eckley Pennsylvania Coal Region history

2025 was a full, difficult, and meaningful year—spent writing, traveling, podcasting, and chasing stories from Pennsylvania’s Coal Region to Ireland’s northwest coast and beyond. This reflection looks back at the moments, places, and people that shaped the work. Read the full story.

Favorite Books of 2025 | Jake Wynn – Public Historian

My 2025 reading list leans hard into the big, difficult stuff - atomic fire over Japan, mass graves in Rwanda and Bosnia, the Molly Maguires, Irish soldiers in blue, and one unforgettable novel about a single patch of New England ground. These are the books that shaped his thinking this year about memory, violence, grief, and how we tell stories. Read the full story.

How Shenandoah, Pennsylvania celebrated Christmas after Pearl Harbor | December 1941

Saturday Evening Post Christmas 1941 Magazine Cover Shenandoah, PA Coal Region History

Less than three weeks after the attack on Pearl Harbor, Christmas 1941 in Shenandoah, PA balanced solemn church services and charity drives with bustling shops and eager children. Families faced empty seats of those in the service or lost in the war's first actions, yet community spirit shone through. Read the full story.

Video: “A Wet Christmas” in Pennsylvania’s Coal Region | A Prohibition story from 1926

In the winter of 1926, a Hazleton, PA reporter went looking for dry Coal Region towns - and found the opposite. Bootleg liquor flowed freely across Carbon, Luzerne, and Schuylkill counties, especially at Christmas. Prohibition barely touched coal country. This new video brings that story to life. Watch the latest video.